Coupling between Deformation and Mass Transport in an Immiscible Alloy at High Shear Strains

33 Pages Posted: 29 Oct 2021

See all articles by Miao Song

Miao Song

Central South University; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

Jia Liu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Xiaolong Ma

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Qin Pang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

Matthew J. Olszta

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Joshua Silverstein

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Madhusudhan R. Pallaka

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Peter Sushko

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

Suveen Mathaudhu

Colorado School of Mines; Government of the United States of America - Energy and Environment Directorate

Cynthia Powell

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Arun Devaraj

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

Bharat Gwalani

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

Abstract

Forced mixing to a single phase or supersaturated solid solution (SSS) and its prerequisite microstructure evolution in immiscible systems has been a focus of research for both fundamental science and a variety of applications. Controlling the formation of SSS by shear deformation assisted processing could enable a material design beyond conventional equilibrium microstructure in immiscible systems. Here, a highly immiscible (mixing enthalpy of ~ 20 kJ·mol-1) Cu-50 at. % Cr binary alloy was employed to investigate the microstructure evolution and localized tendencies of SSS during severe shear deformation. The present results demonstrate distinctive defect mediated microstructure refinement process in each phase and how it leads to localized SSS as a function of shear strain. Preferential dynamic recrystallization occurs in the softer Cu phase due to strain localization, leading to substantial grain refinement. The refinement of Cr phase in the top-most layer, however, is enabled by the progressive evolution of grain lamination, splitting, and fragmentation as a function of shear strain. The eventual SSS is found to be strongly dependent on the local environments that affect the dislocation activity, including the level of microstructure refinement, the interfacial orientation relationship, hardness difference, and supposed stability of oxidation. Ab initio simulations confirm that it is more favorable to oxidize Cr than Cu at incoherent Cu/Cr interfaces which then limits the mass transport on an incoherent boundary. Our results shed light on the underpinning mechanism for non-equilibrium mass transport in immiscible systems upon severe deformation that can be applicable to a variety of processing techniques aimed at producing immiscible alloys with superior mechanical properties.

Keywords: Tribology, Immiscible Alloys, Nanostructures, Shear Deformation, Forced Mixing, Atom Probe

Suggested Citation

Song, Miao and Liu, Jia and Ma, Xiaolong and Pang, Qin and Olszta, Matthew J. and Silverstein, Joshua and Pallaka, Madhusudhan R. and Sushko, Peter and Mathaudhu, Suveen and Powell, Cynthia and Devaraj, Arun and Gwalani, Bharat, Coupling between Deformation and Mass Transport in an Immiscible Alloy at High Shear Strains. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3952389 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3952389

Miao Song

Central South University ( email )

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate ( email )

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Jia Liu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate ( email )

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Xiaolong Ma

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Richland, WA 99354
United States

Qin Pang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate ( email )

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Matthew J. Olszta

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate ( email )

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Joshua Silverstein

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Madhusudhan R. Pallaka

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate ( email )

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Peter Sushko

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

901 D Street
370 L'Enfant Promenade, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024-2115
United States

Suveen Mathaudhu

Colorado School of Mines

Golden, CO 80401
United States

Government of the United States of America - Energy and Environment Directorate ( email )

Richland, WA 99354
United States

Cynthia Powell

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Energy and Environmental Directorate

Richland, WA 99354
United States

Arun Devaraj

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate

United States

Bharat Gwalani (Contact Author)

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - Physical and Computational Sciences Directorate ( email )

United States

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